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The purpose of this Warm-up is to elicit the idea that volume is a measurable attribute, which will be useful when students use informal units and liters to measure volume of liquids and the volume of containers in later activities. While students may notice and wonder many things about these containers, ideas around how much liquid is in each container and which container is filled with the most liquid are the important discussion points.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
In this activity, students explore the volume of containers by estimating and comparing them. Students use a unit container to fill two containers, A and B, to determine which container can be completely filled with a greater volume of water.
To make the comparison interesting, Containers A and B should be different in size and shape, but have a similar capacity. Consider, for example, a bowl and a cup. The unit container should be small enough so that multiple iterations are needed to fill and compare Containers A and B. Consider a large spoon or a small measuring cup.
To involve every student in the measuring process, consider assigning roles of “filler” and “recorder” for Container A, then switch roles for Container B.
The purpose of an Estimation Exploration is to practice the skill of estimating a reasonable answer based on experience and known information. It gives students a low-stakes opportunity to share a mathematical claim and the thinking behind it (MP3). Asking oneself “Does this make sense?” is a component of making sense of problems (MP1). Making an estimate or a range of reasonable answers with incomplete information is a part of modeling with mathematics (MP4).
Your teacher will give you 2 containers labeled “A” and “B,” and another container labeled “unit.”
How many units do you think it takes to fill Container A?
Record an estimate that is:
| too low | about right | too high |
|---|---|---|
How many units do you think it takes to fill Container B?
Record an estimate that is:
| too low | about right | too high |
|---|---|---|
The purpose of this activity is to introduce students to liters as a formal unit to measure liquid volume. Students learn how much space a liter of liquid fills up. Then the whole class fills a large clear container with water one liter at a time. As the container is filled, students mark the container with a dry-erase marker to show the number of liters in the container.
While it is highly recommended that the class has the experience of filling and marking the container, a video has been provided to show the process and could be used for a class demonstration. Having more than one 1-liter container or some prefilled 1-liter containers will make the process of filling and marking the container go faster.
“Today, we learned about the volume of a liquid and the volume of a container.”
“How would you describe the volume of a liquid to someone who doesn't know what it is?” (Liquid volume is the amount of space that a liquid takes up. It’s like measuring how much water is in a glass.)
“How would you describe the volume of a container to someone who doesn’t know what it is?” (The volume of a container is how much liquid is needed to fill it up. It’s like how much liquid something could hold without overflowing.)
“Have you seen containers that were labeled with the volume of liquid they contain? Can you give some examples?” (bottles of drinks or oil, jugs of detergent or liquid soap)
How many liters of water fit in the large container?
Record an estimate that is:
| too low | about right | too high |
|---|---|---|